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Viking-Age Scandinavia was fuelled by exotic objects, notably the silver coins that travelled across long-distance networks. Gotland’s hoards make it an ideal region in which to study the dynamics of and interplay between these networks and the hoarding ...
Kilger, Christoph,
core +3 more sources
The Origins of Viking Age Dogs in Luistari, Eura, Finland
We used stable (δ18O) and radiogenic (87Sr/86Sr) isotopic proxies to investigate the origins of dogs (Canis familiaris) buried in Viking Age graves at Luistari, Finland.
Ulla Moilanen +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
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Scandinavia in the Age of Vikings
2022This book returns to the Viking homeland, Scandinavia, highlighting such key aspects of Viking life as power and politics, social and kinship networks, gifts and feasting, religious beliefs, women's roles, social classes, and the Viking economy, which included farming, iron mining and metalworking, and trade.
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2005
Abstract They are quite coldly matter-of-fact. The figures they give are not exaggerated, and so, when an act of particular atrocity is recorded, we may have some confidence in its historicity. Nothing in the contemporary Irish sources equals the ferocity of the Norse literary evidence, some of which, it is too often forgotten, was ...
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Abstract They are quite coldly matter-of-fact. The figures they give are not exaggerated, and so, when an act of particular atrocity is recorded, we may have some confidence in its historicity. Nothing in the contemporary Irish sources equals the ferocity of the Norse literary evidence, some of which, it is too often forgotten, was ...
openaire +1 more source
2008
Textiles are perishable commodities and are not preserved over long periods unlessspecial conditions are present. Animal fibres (wool and silk) nevertheless survive better than vegetable fibres (linen, nettle, hemp and cotton). An absence of air, constant moisture or direct contact with certain metals can all improve the survival chances of textile ...
openaire +1 more source
Textiles are perishable commodities and are not preserved over long periods unlessspecial conditions are present. Animal fibres (wool and silk) nevertheless survive better than vegetable fibres (linen, nettle, hemp and cotton). An absence of air, constant moisture or direct contact with certain metals can all improve the survival chances of textile ...
openaire +1 more source

